Saratoga

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'Gentleman Johnny'
1777
7th Regiment
A01=Rupert Furneaux
American colonies
American Revolution
American Revolutionary War
American wilderness
Author_Rupert Furneaux
Bemis Heights
British Camp
British military campaigns
British surrender
Burgoyne campaign correspondence study
Burgoyne's Army
Burgoyne’s Army
Category=NHW
Category=NHWF
Category=NHWR
colonial resistance strategies
Conferred
Dense
Devious
eighteenth-century military history
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
European warfare
Follow
Fort Stanwix
Freeman's Farm
Freeman’s Farm
frontier warfare analysis
Garrison
General Gates
Hampshire
Held
Incline
Indian Scouts
Jerseys
Lord George Germain
Mohawk Valley
Northern Army
October 17
Pyrrhic victory
Ravine
Redcoats
Richelieu River
Scrambling
Sir John Burgoyne
Sir William Howe
Sugar Loaf Hill
the 'maladroit' minister
The Grand Strategy
Ticonderoga
transatlantic political conflict
Under Cover
Yorktown

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367650421
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Grand Strategy, the imaginative plan to divide the rebellious American colonies, ended in disaster. On October 17, 1777, General Sir John Burgoyne, alone, unaided and stranded in the American wilderness, capitulated with his army at Saratoga in upper New York State. It was the ‘turning point’ of the Revolution, which culminated four years later in the British surrender at Yorktown. Creasy wrote of Saratoga: ‘Nor can any military event be said to have exercised more important influence upon the future fortunes of mankind…’

Who blundered? For nearly two centuries, Lord George Germain, the ‘maladroit’ minister, has been blamed, together with the Commander-in-Chief, Sir William Howe; but Burgoyne, ‘Gentleman Johnny’ as his affectionate troops called him, has largely escaped criticism.

Only in the late 1960s had a full assessment become possible, by the publication of all the correspondence that passed between these men. Originally published in 1971, from his study of these letters, and by his visit to the campaign area, author Rupert Furneaux questions this long accepted view.

The British disaster resulted, he says, not because anyone particularly blundered, or from any ‘pigeon-holed’ despatch, but rather because no one bargained that thousands of ordinary American citizens would rally to bar Burgoyne’s path. Experienced frontier-fighters and skilled marksmen, they mowed down the closely-ranked Redcoats and the German mercenaries, who had all been trained for European battles. Saratoga heralded a new age of warfare, which Europeans took another hundred years to learn. It was also far more than a British defeat; it was an American victory, the decisive battle whereby they won the right to run their own lives without interference from Europe – and with incalculable consequences.

Rupert Furneaux

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